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Re: Moving fibre trunks: interruptions?


From: Rod Beck <rod.beck () unitedcablecompany com>
Date: Mon, 4 Sep 2017 19:00:59 +0000

I agree as an European resident that is varies by country, but my impression is that it is a lot less. For example, 
fiber cuts on the European racetrack (London/Paris/Frankfurt/Amsterdam/London) seems to involve buried cable. It may 
just be a difference in regulatory regimes.


- R.


________________________________
From: NANOG <nanog-bounces () nanog org> on behalf of Michael Hallgren <mh () xalto net>
Sent: Saturday, September 2, 2017 9:47 PM
To: nanog () nanog org
Subject: Re: Moving fibre trunks: interruptions?

Le 02/09/2017 à 21:25, Baldur Norddahl a écrit :
That depends on the country. Here in Denmark it is not possible to get
rights to put up any aerial at all. The cost difference is irrelevant when
you have no option but to put it in the ground.

Not only is there no new aerial installations here but the old ones are
taken down. Very little is left by now and in a few years it will all be
gone. The municipalities want it pretty and wires in the air is ugly.

One advantage however is that buried stuff usually survives storms better.

Right. Here in France it (aerial running along with copper) happens
even close to metropoles (like Paris).
mh

Den 1. sep. 2017 21.53 skrev "Rod Beck" <rod.beck () unitedcablecompany com>:

I don't think there is virtually any aerial in Europe. So given the cost
difference why is virtually all fiber buried on this side of the Atlantic?



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